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Ledger kept by a house of prostitution (1909-1910)

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Wisconsin. Legislature. Committee on White Slave Traffic and Kindred Subjects

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In 1913, the Legislature established a committee to investigate the causes of prostitution and other vice in Wisconsin. Chaired by Sen. Howard Teasdale (1855-1936), it sent questionaires to officials throughout the state and held hearings in many cities. During those hearings it questioned working women about their lives, asked religious and civic leaders about vice in their communities, and consulted experts about how to reduce or eliminate the suffering caused by prostitution, alcoholism, and other social problems. It even sent undercover investigators into brothels and taverns around the state, before it issued its final report in 1914. Teasdale's investigation produced hundreds of pages of first-hand evidence about Wisconsin women whose lives otherwise went largely undocumented. Selected photographs from the commission's files are online at Wisconsin Historical Images. At an unknown point in its research it came into possession of this 6 x 8" ledger volume, which archivists later
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Wisconsin Historical Society

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Recollection Wisconsin